AION 2 has posted a much larger enforcement notice on the Taiwan service, and this one is big enough that players probably noticed before even opening the full post. In the official 82nd sanctions notice, published on April 2, 2026, NCSoft said it had issued permanent bans to 940 accounts for violations tied to its operating policy.
What the official notice says
According to the official notice, the permanently banned accounts were penalized under categories tied to “workshop” activity and the use, creation, or distribution of unofficial programs. NCSoft also linked a sanctions list and, in the same update, said 1,747 accounts received 7-day suspensions for issues including unofficial programs, disruptive behavior, and attempted real-money trading. The company also notes that repeated violations can escalate to a permanent ban after multiple strikes.
This is a very different scale from what we saw in late March
That is what makes this worth covering as its own story. In our earlier piece on AION 2 Penalizes 62 More Accounts Over Abyss and Spacetime Rift Abuse, the crackdown was focused on a much smaller batch of accounts tied to abuse in competitive content. This new April 2 notice is broader, harsher, and much more clearly aimed at cleaning up the overall game environment rather than just one specific exploit lane.
It also fits the pattern AION 2 has been showing lately
Over the past couple of weeks, AION 2 has looked very much like a game in active live-service cleanup mode. We already saw that in AION 2 Emergency Maintenance Compensation: What Happened on March 26 and What Players Needed to Claim, where NCSoft pushed a targeted fix for a Spiritmaster PvP issue, and in AION 2 March 25 Update News Focuses on Class Skill Changes and Combat Tweaks, where the focus was on rapid class and combat adjustments. Put together, the pattern is pretty clear: the team is still tuning systems, correcting issues, and policing the environment at the same time. That broader reading is an inference based on the sequence of official updates and notices.
Why this matters for ordinary players
A 62-account notice feels like a warning shot. A 940-account permanent-ban wave feels more like NCSoft deciding the warning period is over. For normal players, that matters because it suggests the company is willing to take large-scale action when it thinks account behavior is hurting the game. If you are playing fairly, that is usually a good sign. If you are relying on shady shortcuts, it is a pretty expensive way to test your luck.
The bigger takeaway
The real headline here is not just the number. It is the message behind it. AION 2 is still in a phase where NCSoft appears willing to move fast, tune aggressively, and swing hard when it sees abuse. In MMO terms, that usually means the studio wants players to notice that the cleanup is happening

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